Widely Tunable Distributed Bragg Reflectors Integrated into Nanowire

Sep 17, 2015 - Widely Tunable Distributed Bragg Reflectors Integrated into Nanowire Waveguides. Anthony Fu†§ ... This work introduces nanoscale DBR...
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Letter pubs.acs.org/NanoLett

Widely Tunable Distributed Bragg Reflectors Integrated into Nanowire Waveguides Anthony Fu,†,§ Hanwei Gao,†,§,∥ Petar Petrov,† and Peidong Yang*,†,‡,§ †

Department of Chemistry and ‡Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, United States § Materials Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California 94720, United States ∥ Department of Physics, Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida 32306, United States S Supporting Information *

ABSTRACT: Periodic structures with dimensions on the order of the wavelength of light can tailor and improve the performance of optical components, and they can enable the creation of devices with new functionalities. For example, distributed Bragg reflectors (DBRs), which are created by periodic modulations in a structure’s dielectric medium, are essential in dielectric mirrors, vertical cavity surface emitting lasers, fiber Bragg gratings, and single-frequency laser diodes. This work introduces nanoscale DBRs integrated directly into gallium nitride (GaN) nanowire waveguides. Photonic band gaps that are tunable across the visible spectrum are demonstrated by precisely controlling the grating’s parameters. Numerical simulations indicate that in-wire DBRs have significantly larger reflection coefficients in comparison with the nanowire’s end facet. By comparing the measured spectra with the simulated spectra, the index of refraction of the GaN nanowire waveguides was extracted to facilitate the design of photonic coupling structures that are sensitive to phase-matching conditions. This work indicates the potential to design nanowire-based devices with improved performance for optical resonators and optical routing. KEYWORDS: Distributed Bragg Reflectors, nanowire, photonics, gallium nitride, waveguides, selected-area spectroscopy

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there have been reports of embedding nanowires into separate periodic structures to achieve a Purcell enhancement and photonic band gaps in hybrid microresonator structures.21,22 Recently, the fabrication of polymer nanofiber-based distributed feedback (DFB) lasers was demonstrated using nanoimprint lithography.23 The ability to fabricate DBRs in a semiconductor nanostructure is also of considerable interest because inorganic semiconductors generally exhibit favorable transport properties, material stability, and fabrication infrastructure for compact optoelectronics. Tuned properly, these architectures can be used to select specific wavelengths for optical routing, singlemode lasing, and potentially lower the lasing threshold of nanowire-based lasers.17,18 In this work, the integration of DBR structures into GaN nanowires is demonstrated with photonic stopbands that are broadly tunable across the visible spectrum. Numerical simulations based on finite element methods were used to guide the design of the DBR geometry and to analyze the results from the experimental measurements. These DBRintegrated nanowires are promising for compact photonic devices. A method has also been developed to measure the index of refraction of a GaN nanowire waveguide, which can aid

emiconductor nanowires have drawn considerable interest as a platform for miniaturized photonics grown bottomup.1−3 Their one-dimensional geometry mimics conventional photonic platforms that use large-aspect-ratio structures such as waveguides and optical cavities in a highly compact geometry. This resemblance has inspired researchers to explore the use of semiconductor nanowires for miniaturized lasers,4,5 optical routing,6,7 and other optoelectronic components.8−10 Furthermore, there has been considerable effort in nanowire research to control the size,11 shape,12 and composition13−15 of nanowires for photonic applications. In particular, the ability to manipulate the photonic structure of nanowires has enabled the precise control of their optical properties for improved optoelectronic functions. For example, axially coupling nanowire cavities introduces extra degrees of freedom to manipulate the lasing modes in semiconductor nanowires for single-mode lasing and yields a significant reduction in the lasing threshold at room temperature.16 Periodic structures are indispensable for modern optics and optoelectronics. The optical properties of a film can be precisely controlled through careful selection of its material properties and optical structure, which has enabled innumerable inventions in optics and photonics. The integration of periodic structures, such as DBRs,17,18 into a nanowire can improve the performance and enable additional photonic functionalities in these compact structures.19,20 Previously, © XXXX American Chemical Society

Received: July 17, 2015 Revised: September 13, 2015

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DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.5b02839 Nano Lett. XXXX, XXX, XXX−XXX

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Nano Letters

in the design of future broadband optoelectronics using building blocks based on nanowires. DBRs were created by defining periodic indentations in a GaN nanowire using a fabrication scheme based on focused ion beam milling (Figure 1). A detailed description of the fabrication procedure can be found in the Supporting Information. Briefly, single-crystalline GaN nanowires were synthesized via chemical vapor transport using a hot-wall furnace at 900−1000 °C. These triangularly faceted wires are typically 150−300 nm in cross-sectional height (tip-to-side facet) and can be up to 150 μm long. A focused ion beam was used to pattern periodic indentations into nanowires with controlled periodicity, duty cycle, and depth of indentation. It is critical to control the alignment and focus of the gallium ion beam and the dosage of milling in order to fabricate these indentations with precise geometric parameters (Figure 1). As demonstrated previously,16 cut widths as narrow as 30 nm can be achieved. The depth of each cut can be controlled by the beam current and the dosage time down to less than 10 nm. Because the wires are not completely milled through, it is possible to pick up a fabricated wire with a micromanipulator and then transfer it to another substrate for further fabrication or characterization. Long GaN nanowires (>40 μm) serve as a platform to study DBRs in semiconductor nanowires. In these structures, the periodicity enables large reflection coefficients at the Bragg wavelength due to constructive interference. DBRs with a large number of periods (50−100) and a wide range of periodicities for tunable stopbands can be fabricated into these long nanowires, highlighting this nanoscale integration. Furthermore, for this transmission measurement, a method to normalize the emission that has propagated through the DBR with the emission without the DBR was developed. To account for this normalization, DBRs were fabricated onto one-half of the wire while leaving the other half untouched (Figure 2a). When a nanowire is excited with a laser focused at its center, the broad spontaneous emission from defects that has coupled to the waveguide mode will propagate in both directions, through the grating structure and through the unmilled portion

Figure 1. Scanning electron microscopy images of a distributed Bragg reflector fabricated in a GaN nanowire. (a) A 45° image of a 54 μm long nanowire with the grating on the top half of the waveguide on a 150 μm thick fused silica substrate with ∼1−5 nm of sputtered Au for imaging. Scale bar = 10 μm. (b). Close-up image of (a) showing a 50 period grating with 200 nm periodicity. Scale bar = 1 μm.

Figure 2. Measurement of the stopbands from DBRs fabricated within a single nanowire. (a) Illustration of the device structure and the measurement of the DBR spectra. The waveguide mode propagates to both ends of the nanowire and the spectra from each end facet are collected separately. The DBR will selectively block the propagation of specific wavelengths. (b) Normalized transmission measurements on six different devices demonstrating tunable photonic band gaps across the visible spectrum for broadband photonics. B

DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.5b02839 Nano Lett. XXXX, XXX, XXX−XXX

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Nano Letters

stopband across the visible spectrum from blue to red by increasing the periodicity and varying the milling conditions in the fabrication process (Figure 2b). The full-width halfmaximum (fwhm) of these band can be narrow (